Our Outdoor interpretive signs and panels have been featured inTree City USA Bulletin No. 65by the
These images are low resolution for faster web display, the high resolution images to be used for producing your signs are much sharper and clearer.To view a full resolution sign image click here.

Below are photos showing the actual size and thickness of the 4" X 9" Standard Fiberglass Panel Signs. For reference the paper the pencil is resting on, is 8.5" X 11".

Click in each photo to enlarge it.

Below are photos showing the actual size and thickness of the 4" X 9" High Pressure Composite Panel Signs.

Click in each photo to enlarge it.

Let us know what you want your custom panel to convey, and our team will develop an image proof using your suggested text and/or photos. We will then work with you to make your custom interpretive panel truly your own by editing to your specifications.

If you are interrested in our stock images we will supply a web page of images based on a list of species which you send us. Please send a list of topics or species with common and scientific names if possible.

Most of our customers are involved in projects related to Outdoor Classrooms, Nature Centers, and Environmental Education in general. Several years ago I became involved in the establishment of an outdoor learning center and requests for this type assistance resulted in me offering my services in the production of interpretive signs. Community participation and support for these efforts has been tremendous. I make no apologies for the time used in helping to educate our future citizens about the importance of protecting and conserving our natural environment. I invite each of you to join these efforts, as volunteers or just observers. The following quote may explain why our youth are exuberant when in natural settings. Using the real world is the way learning has happened for 99.9% of human existence. Only in the last hundred years have we put it in a little box called a classroom. From an article, Letting nature shape childhood, by Will Nixon, published in The Amicus Journal, Fall 1997, page 34.

David Arthur, Owner.

Aristotle once said, "For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them". I say, "To learn about this world of ours, take a nature walk, experience the wonders of life." Our Experiential Learning panel